The instant invention utilizes the preferential uptake of iodine by mammary cells in general, and neoplastic mammary cells in particular to promote the concentration of radioactive iodine in malignant mammary cells. radioactive iodine has utility in the instant invention as both a cancer therapeutic and a radioimaging dye. iodine 125 and/or iodine 131 are administered in doses from 1 to 50 milliCurie per day. Subsequent doses may also be administered as clinically warranted. Administration of hormones prior to, or simultaneous with, the administration of the radio iodine is optionally utilized to stimulate iodine uptake in neoplastic mammary cells or to inhibit iodine uptake by the thyroid gland.
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12. A composition for mammary tissue uptake comprising:
an inorganic radioactive iodide salt in contact with mammary tissue; and a carrier for said salt, said carrier suitable for parenteral injection.
19. A method for treating a breast cancer of a patient comprising the step of:
administering between 1 and 50 millicuries of 125 I as a salt selected from a group consisting of: sodium iodide and potassium iodide to the breast cancer of the patient.
1. A method for treating a breast cancer of a patient comprising the step of:
administering a radioisotope of iodide selected from the group consisting of 125 I- and 131 I- to the breast cancer of the patient in a dosage of between 5 millicuries and 50 millicuries in a period of one day.
11. A method for treating a breast cancer of a patient comprising the step of:
elevating patient levels of prolactin by the administration of therapeutic doses of dopamine antagonist so as to enhance the uptake of said radioisotope by the breast cancer; and administering a radioisotope of iodine to the breast cancer of the patient in a dosage of between 5 millicuries and 50 millicuries in a period of one day.
21. A method of treating breast cancer of a patient comprising:
delivering therapeutic doses of levothroxine prior to administering a radioisotope of iodide to the breast cancer of the patient; allowing sufficient time prior to administration of said radioisotope for thyroid uptake of said radioisotope to be diminished; and administering said radioisotope in a dosage of between 5 millicuries and 50 millicuries in a period of one day.
2. The method of
administering a successive bolus of said radioactive iodide to the breast cancer of the patient, said bolus being between 1 milliCurie and 50 milliCurie per day following said dosage.
3. The method of
administering additional boli of said radioactive iodide over a period of less than four weeks.
4. The method of
5. The method of
6. The method of
7. The method of
8. The method of
a) delivering therapeutic doses of a thyroid hormone prior to administering said radioisotope; and b) allowing sufficient time prior to administration of said radioisotope for thyroid uptake of said radioisotope to be diminished.
9. The method of
a) elevating patient levels of prolactin so as to enhance the uptake of said radioisotope by the breast cancer.
10. The method of
13. The composition of
14. The composition of
15. The composition of
17. The composition of
18. A method for in situ imaging of breast cancer cells comprising the steps of:
administering a composition of allowing sufficient time for said composition to collect in mammary tissue of the breast cancer patient; and spatially imaging iodide within the mammary tissue of the breast cancer patient.
20. The method of
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This patent application claims priority of provisional patent application 60/056,315, filed Sep. 3, 1997, entitled "Method for Treating and/or Imaging Breast Cancer Using Radioactive Iodide."
It has long been known that iodide appears in the milk of mammals. The levels of iodide in the milk of a variety of mammals including humans are 20-30 fold higher than that present in the maternal plasma. Since about 50% of the iodide in milk is incorporated into milk proteins, the mechanisms that drive the accumulation of iodide in milk could include the functioning of an iodide transporter and/or enzymes involved in iodide incorporation into proteins. Early experiments showed a decreased 131 I accumulation in milk when lactating rats were injected with perchlorate (an inhibitor of the iodide transporter) or methimazole (an inhibitor of peroxidase). Perchlorate was more potent in inhibiting total 131 I uptake, whereas methimazole, primarily inhibited 131 I binding to milk proteins. These in vivo studies suggest that both an iodide transporter and a peroxidase enzyme are present in mammary cells, and are involved in the accumulation of iodide in milk during lactation.
Studies in the literature focusing on the hormonal regulation of iodide transport in the mammary gland are limited. It has been reported that thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) or thyroxin injected into lactating rats had no effect on 131 I secretion into milk. In addition, prolactin (PRL), growth hormone (GH), insulin or cortisol had no effect on iodide uptake into cultured mammary tissues taken from lactating rats.
Studies in the literature concerning iodide uptake in neoplastic mammary cells reported that radioactive iodide concentration in biopsied human breast tissue with carcinoma or dysplasia is higher than in histologically normal tissues from the same patients.
The instant invention involves a method for treating a breast cancer of a patient. The method includes the administration of a radioisotope of iodine to the breast cancer of the patient in a dosage of between 5 and 50 milliCuries over the course of one day. Additional doses of iodine radioisotopes may be administered in dosage of between 1 milliCurie and 50 milliCurie as clinically warranted.
The instant invention utilizes a composition for mammary tissue uptake. This composition includes an inorganic radioactive iodide salt and a parenterally injectable carrier therefor. The radioactive iodide salt includes alkali metal iodides, alkali earth iodides, transition metal iodides, iodine pentoxide and iodine tribromide. Adjuvants are optionally added to this composition in order to increase iodine uptake by mammary tissue, and/or inhibit iodine uptake by the thyroid gland. The compositions of the instant invention find utility as breast cancer therapeutics and as radioimaging dyes.
The treatment of breast cancer currently is limited to malignant growths large enough to be targeted surgically or by external radiation sources. In contrast, the instant invention delivers radioisotopes of iodine to mammary cells as an ion. Due to the selective uptake of iodide by mammary cells, malignant cell clusters too small to be otherwise treated receive a radiation dose. The treatment of breast cancer as described in the instant invention is effective in lessening the likelihood of metastasis and in inhibiting or killing cancerous cells.
The instant invention harnesses the natural ability of mammary cells to concentrate iodide internally. While the mechanisms of iodide uptake are not fally understood, a radioisotope of iodine is administered in vivo and generates therapeutic dosimetries of radioactive decay products in those tissues in which the cells concentrate iodide. A therapeutic administration ranges from between 1 milliCurie (mCi) and 50 milliCuries.
In order to further localize radioactive iodine uptake within mammary cells, substances are optionally administered which function to: 1) stimulate mammary cell uptake, such as prolactin or dopamine antagonists; or 2) inhibit uptake by other body tissues, such as thyroid hormones.
Substances are administered to further localize iodine uptake in mammary cells at times prior to, in concert with, or after the administration of the radioactive iodine, depending on the factors including pharmokinetics of the specific substance, the radiation dosimetry and the radioisotope half life.
The instant invention also finds application in the radioimaging of mammary tissues. Radiation flux variations which relate to cellular condition are detectable by conventional radioimaging techniques, owing to the increased metabolism of malignant cells relative to normal cells.
Based on the above observations, a method for treating breast cancer is described in the instant invention. While all radioisotopes of iodide are operative in the instant invention, it is preferred that 125 I and/or 131 I be administered to treat breast cancer, owing to the decay mode, decay energy, isotope half life and other properties. More preferably, 125 I is administered to treat breast cancer.
The radioisotope of iodine is administered as an iodide salt that is soluble in a carrier solution compatible with physiological pH and molality. The radioisotope of iodine is administered in the form of an alkali metal, alkali earth or transition metal iodide, iodine pentoxide, or iodine tribromide compounds. Preferably, the radioisotope of iodine is administered as sodium iodide or potassium iodide.
The instant invention functions in part because an iodide transporter is present in neoplastic mammary cells. It is observed that radioactive iodide is concentrated by more than 80-fold in MCF-7 cells cultured for 10 minutes with 125 I. MCF-7 cells are a neoplastic mammary cell line of human origin. These studies support the existence of an iodide transporter in at least certain neoplastic mammary cells.
The radioisotope of iodine is administered parenterally with a suitable carrier, for example in saline or buffered vehicles with or without various adjuvants. The adjuvants optionally include hormones to further increase the iodide transport in mammary cells and decrease the uptake of other cell types containing iodide transporters.
In a single bolus method of the instant invention, between 5 and 50 mCi of radioactive iodine is administered. Preferably, the iodine is administered as the sodium salt of 125 I or 131 I.
In a multiple bolus method of the instant invention between 1 and 50 mCi of radioactive iodine is administered per dosage. Between 2 and 20 such dosages are administered over a period of three days to four weeks. The individual dosages may be of equivalent dosimetry, or the dosimetry may vary between the doses. Preferably, the iodine is administered as the sodium salt of 125 I or 131 I.
In an infusion method of the instant invention, the radioisotope of iodine is administered intravenously by means of an infusion pump for from 1 day to 30 days. The daily dosimetry being between 1 and 50 mCi per day. Preferably the iodine is administered as the sodium salt of 125 I or 131 I.
Optionally, steps are taken to elevate prolactin levels, in order to stimulate the iodide uptake process in neoplastic mammary cells. In such instances, prolactin is administered for from three to sixty days prior to the administration of the radioisotope of iodide therapy. Prolactin, for such purposes is administered in doses ranging from 0.01 to 5 milligrams per kilogram body weight per day. Alternatively, clinically significant doses of a dopamine antagonist are administered for three to sixty days prior to the radioisotope therapy. The dopamine antagonist thereby serves to elevate endogenous prolactin levels.
The inventor has discovered that PRL doubles the rate of iodide accumulation in cultured mammary tissues taken from 12-14 day pregnant mice. In time course studies of the instant invention, it is observed that there is an initial effect of PRL after 4 hr, whereas a maximum two- to threefold increase in iodide accumulation occurs after 24 hr. In dose-response studies, 1 ng/ml PRL elicited a significant response, whereas PRL concentrations >5 ng/ml stimulated maximum responses. Other lactogenic hormones, including human growth hormone (GH) and human placental lactogens, also stimulated iodide uptake, whereas nonlactogenic substances, including bovine GH, bovine serum albumin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone, are without effect. PRL has no effect on iodide uptake into fat cells. In further studies, PRL stimulates iodide incorporation into macromolecules in a 10% trichloroacetic acid-precipitable tissue fraction, as well as in a pH 4.6 isoelectric precipitate. The findings from these studies demonstrate that PRL is effective in a treatment regime to stimulate both the accumulation of free iodide in milk and iodide incorporation into milk proteins. Actinomycin-D and cycloheximide are observed to abolish the PRL stimulation of iodide uptake and its incorporation into protein. Perchlorate and thiocyanate, inhibitors of the iodide transporter, also abolish the PRL effects on iodide uptake and incorporation. Similarly, propylthiouracil and aminothiazole, inhibitors of peroxidase, abolish both effects of PRL. Finally, the extent of iodide uptake in mammary cells is suppressed by about 50% in sodium free medium.
In a course of administering the radioisotope to a patient, increased treatment efficiencies and minimization of spurious irradiation of the thyroid gland is optionally performed. The thyroid gland is protected during the radioactive iodide therapy by administering therapeutic doses of thyroid hormones. These hormones illustratively include levothyroxine. Such hormones delivered in quantities of from about one to ten micrograms per kilogram body weight per day, for five days to four weeks preceding the radio iodide therapy is typically sufficient to limit thyroid tissue uptake of the radioisotope.
In another embodiment of the instant invention, in situ images of breast cancer cells are obtained based on inorganic iodide accumulation in such cells. Such images are obtained illustratively in computed axial tomography (CAT), positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Furthermore, conventionally histological and immunological methods that employ iodide binding to a transporter protein in breast cancer cells are also appreciated to be within the scope of the instant invention.
A better understanding of the instant invention and of its many advantages should be had by referring to the following specific examples, given by way of illustration.
PAC Mammary Tumor Stimulation in Rats.Forty Holtzman Sprague-Dawley female rats (50 days of age) are given the mammary carcinogen, 9,10-dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene (DMBA); 15 mg/rat in sesame oil) by oral lavage. Then, 15 days later each rat is bilaterally ovariectomized and given a subcutaneous SILASTIC™ implant filled with crystalline estradiol to stimulate daily prolactin surges (as per Caligaris et al. J. Endocranial 60:205-215, 1974), which induce iodide transporters in mammary tissue and enhanced mammary tumor induction. Each rat is examined twice weekly for the presence of mammary tumors beginning 30 days after DMBA treatment. When three or more tumors that are larger than 5 mm×5 mm in size are present in a rat, then that rat will be used for experimentation.
PAC Treatment of Mammary Tumors in Rats.The rats will be weighed and placed in a rat restrainer and injected with carrier-free 131 I Na (100 μCi/kg) via the tail vein. The injected animals are euthanized by a lethal injection of sodium pentobarbital (120 mg/kg, i.p.) at 2, 15 or 30 min or 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 hours (5 rats per time point) after radioiodine injection. At the time of euthanasia, mammary tumors and non-tumorous mammary tissue, thyroid, salivary glands, skeletal muscle, liver, adipose tissue, and blood are collected. The tissue is cut into 5-10 mg pieces, each of which is weighed. A sample of each tissue collected is counted in a gamma counter directly. A second sample of each is homogenized in 3 ml 10% trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and centrifuged. Radioactivity in the TCA-precipitable (primarily proteins) and soluble fractions will be determined. Additional tissue samples are employed to assess intracellular and extracellular spaces in the tissue samples by equilibration with radio labeled [3 H]OH and 14 C-sucrose (J. A. Rillema and T. X. Yu, Amer. J. Physiol 34: E879-E882, 1996). Intracellular uptake of radioactive iodide and its incorporation into protein is then be calculated. The tissue to blood ratio is also determined.
PAC Rat Mammary Tumor Uptake of Iodide Radioisotope.An in vivo time-course of radio labeled iodide uptake and incorporation is obtained for mammary tumors and a variety of "control" tissues, some of which are known to possess iodide transporters. Radiolabeled iodide is observed to selectively accumulate in mammary tumor cells.
PAC 131 I treatment of Rat Mammary Cell Tumors.Two groups of 20 Holtzman Sprague-Dawley female rats each are treated with DMBA at 50 days of age as in Example 1. Similarly, all rats are ovariectomized and treated with estrogen as above. When three or more mammary tumors appear, one group (the experimental) is treated with carrier free 131 I Na (100 μCi/kg) via the tail vein while the other group (the controls) is treated with an equivalent amount of nonradioactive NaI. Mammary tumor size and location is identified at the time of iodide treatment and twice a week thereafter for 30 days; the incidence of new tumors is also monitored. To maintain elevated estradiol and prolactin levels, the estradiol implants are replaced at 30 days and the animal's tumor status followed for an additional 30 days. Since spontaneous regression of tumors is sometimes observed in DMBA-treated animals, the control group allows for an estimation of spontaneous regression in the absence of radioiodine therapy. Likewise, tumor size may regress when the estradiol implants become exhausted. This is be assessed by inserting a new capsule at 30 days. After accounting for these factors tumor regression and inhibition are noted for only the experimental group.
PAC 125 I Treatment of Rat Mammary Cell Tumors.The procedure as described in Example 4 except that 125 I will be administered instead of 131 I. After accounting for experimental factors, tumor regression and inhibition are noted for only the experimental group.
PAC The Effect of Chronic 125 I Treatment on Mammary Tumor Growth in Rats.The procedure as described in Example 4, except that the iodide treatment will be done using, subcutaneously implanted Alzet osmotic minipumps (7, 14 or 28 day capacities) filled with carrier-free 125 I (70, 140 or 280 μCi/minipump respectively; 3 experimental groups) or nonradioactive NaI (28 day osmotic minipump, one control group) and connected to a catheter implanted in the jugular vein. Mammary tumor growth and location is monitored twice weekly for 30 days. As tumor regression occurs, the estradiol implants are replaced with implants and the tumor status followed for another 30 days. After accounting for experimental factors, tumor regression and inhibition are noted for only the experimental group.
Any publications mentioned in this specification are indicative of the levels of those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. These publications are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
Various modifications of the instant invention in addition to those shown and described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art of the above description. Such modifications are also intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
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